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Sir John's talk will aptly be followed by a talk from Richard Archer on the TSB new catapult on Regenerative Medicine & Cell Therapy.
Sir John Gurdon - Biography
Professor Sir John Gurdon, FRS, was educated at Eton, where he did Classics, having been advised that he was unsuited for science. He was accepted at Christ Church, Oxford on Classics entrance, but switched to Zoology (Head of Department, Sir Alister Hardy). He did he Ph.D. with Michael Fischberg on nuclear transplantation in Xenopus. He obtained the first clone of genetically identical adult animals. He demonstrated genetic totopotency of somatic cell nuclei by obtaining sexually mature frogs from the nuclei of intestinal epithelium.
Sir John Gurdon has received many recognitions for his work, listed below:
Albert Brachet Prize, Belgian Royal Academy, 1968
Scientific Medal of the Zoological Society, 1968
Fellow of the Royal Society, 1971
Feldberg Foundation Award, 1975
Croonian Lecturer and John Jaffe Prize, Royal Society, 1976
Paul-Ehrlich-Ludwig-Darmstaedter Prize, Germany, 1977
Hon. Foreign Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1978
Fellow, Eton College, 1978
Hon. D.Sc., University of Chicago, 1978
Nessim Habif Prize, University of Geneva, 1979
Ciba Medal and Prize of the Biochemical Society, 1980
Foreign Associate, U.S. National Academy of Sciences, 1980
Docteur Honoris Causa, Université René Déscartes, Paris, 1982
Comfort Crookshank Triennial Award for Cancer Research, Middlesex Hospital Medical School, 1983
Foreign Member, American Philosophical Society, 1983
William Bate Hardy Triennial Prize, Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1984
Foreign Associate, Belgian Royal Academy of Sciences, Letters, and Fine Arts, 1984
Priz Charles Leopold Mayer, Academie des Sciences, France, 1984
Honorary Studentship (i.e. Fellowship), Christ Church, Oxford, 1985
Ross Harrison Prize, International Society of Developmental Biology, 1985
Royal Medal, Royal Society, 1985
Fullerian Professor of Physiology and Comparative Anatomy, Royal Institution, 1985
Emperor Hirohito International Prize for Biology, Japan, 1987
Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, University of Oxford, 1988
Wolf Prize in Medicine, 1989
Foreign Member, Lombardy Academy of Science, 1989
Foreign Associate, Académie des Sciences, Institut de France, 1990
Member, Academia Europaea, 1991
Swedish Oncology Society, Jan Waldenstrom Medal, 1991
Distinguished Service Award, Miami, 1992
Knight Bachelor, June 1995
Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, University of Hull, 1998
Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, University of Glasgow, 2000
Jean Brachet Memorial Prize, International Society for Differentiation, 2000
Conklin Medal, Society for Developmental Biology, 2001
Nobel Prize for Medicine, 2012
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